Looking for budget-friendly dedicated servers with solid DDoS protection? SharkTech's Black Friday deals bring E3/E5 servers starting at just $44/month with unlimited bandwidth and 60Gbps free DDoS defense. Whether you're running high-traffic applications, gaming servers, or need reliable hosting in the US or Europe, these promotions deliver enterprise-grade hardware at entry-level prices—without compromising on network stability or security features.
SharkTech (also known as Shark Room or SK) has been around since 2003. That's over two decades of running data centers, which means they've seen enough internet storms to know what matters. They own and operate facilities in Los Angeles, Chicago, Denver, and Amsterdam—not reselling someone else's racks, but actually managing their own hardware and network infrastructure.
The standout feature? Every server comes with 60Gbps DDoS protection by default. You're not paying extra for it, and you're not scrambling to enable it when an attack hits. It's just there, running quietly in the background like a good security guard should.
Their Los Angeles location even offers CN2 routing options, which explains why plenty of users in Asia rent their servers—the connectivity just works better for cross-Pacific traffic.
Now let's talk about these Black Friday deals. They're not doing the usual "limited quantity flash sale panic" thing. Just straightforward discounts on solid hardware.
The dedicated server lineup includes several configurations, all with 1Gbps port speed, unlimited bandwidth, free 60Gbps DDoS protection, IPMI access, and IPv6 support. You can choose between Chicago, Denver, and Amsterdam data centers. There's a one-server-per-account limit, but honestly, if you need more than one, you're probably past the "promotional deal" stage anyway.
These aren't the latest-generation processors, but here's the thing—for many workloads, older Xeon chips still handle the job perfectly fine. If you're running web servers, databases, game servers, or anything that doesn't require cutting-edge single-thread performance, an E3 or E5 will serve you well while keeping costs down.
The RAM configurations range from reasonable to generous depending on which model you pick. Storage is typically SATA drives, which makes sense at this price point—SSDs would push the monthly cost higher, and frankly, not everyone needs NVMe speeds for their application.
👉 Check out SharkTech's current server inventory and pricing options
If dedicated hardware feels like overkill, SharkTech's VPS promotion might fit better. These use KVM virtualization, come with 1Gbps ports, and you get the same data center choices: Los Angeles, Chicago, Denver, and Amsterdam.
There are two promo codes depending on your configuration:
For 1-core, 1GB RAM plans: Use code BF2019VPS1G
For 1-core, 2GB RAM and higher: Use code BF2019VPS50
The 50% discount brings the entry-level annual price down to $36/year. That's $3 per month. For a KVM VPS with decent bandwidth in a legitimate data center, that's pretty reasonable.
Small VPS instances like these work well for lightweight applications—personal websites, development environments, small databases, VPN endpoints, monitoring tools, that sort of thing. You're not going to host the next viral app on a 1GB VPS, but for steady-state workloads with predictable resource usage, they're perfectly adequate.
Before committing, you should probably test the network performance from your location. SharkTech provides test IPs and download files for each data center:
Los Angeles: 107.167.3.4
Download test: https://la.sharktech.net/tools/speedtest/testfile100.zip
Denver: 70.39.65.252
Download test: https://denver.sharktech.net/tools/speedtest/testfile100.zip
Amsterdam: 45.58.188.8
Download test: https://ams.sharktech.net/tools/speedtest/testfile100.zip
Chicago: 204.188.238.8
Download test: https://chicago.sharktech.net/tools/speedtest/testfile100.zip
Run a few pings, download the test file, check latency during different times of day. Network performance varies based on your location and ISP routing, so real-world testing beats marketing promises every time.
Dedicated servers make sense when you've outgrown shared hosting or VPS limitations. Maybe your application uses enough resources that noisy neighbors on shared infrastructure become a problem. Maybe you need specific kernel configurations or custom networking setups that virtualization layers don't allow. Maybe you're running something that requires predictable, dedicated CPU cycles.
The DDoS protection is legitimately useful if you're running game servers, APIs, or anything public-facing that might attract unwanted attention. Even if you never get attacked, knowing the protection exists removes one item from your worry list.
For international projects with audience spread across regions, having multiple data center options lets you place servers closer to your users. Amsterdam serves Europe well, while the US locations cover different parts of North America with varying routing characteristics.
SharkTech accepts Alipay and PayPal, which covers most users' preferred payment methods. The support isn't going to win awards for revolutionary customer service, but they handle technical issues competently—which is what actually matters when your server needs attention.
Their control panel is functional rather than beautiful. You can reboot servers, access IPMI, manage networking, check bandwidth graphs—all the essential stuff without unnecessary complications.
SharkTech's Black Friday promotion delivers practical value without marketing gimmicks. E3/E5 dedicated servers from $44/month with unlimited bandwidth and included DDoS protection offer solid fundamentals for budget-conscious deployments. The VPS options at $36/year provide an even lower entry point for lighter workloads. With multiple data centers spanning the US and Europe, established infrastructure since 2003, and straightforward technical capabilities, 👉 SharkTech works well for projects needing reliable hosting without premium pricing. Test their network from your location, compare the specs against your actual requirements, and the numbers should tell you whether it's the right fit.